In
June, 2007 a solid eighty percent of the American people let Congress
know they wanted the government to put the brakes on illegal immigration;
they turned thumbs down on the President's guest worker amnesty plan;
and they wanted tax-paid services to illegals stopped.

Most
Americans understand that new laws are not needed to stop illegal immigration.
What is necessary is repeal of some laws granting taxpayer-financed
services to illegals along with enforcement of existing laws. These
two acts would be enough to stop the migration. In simple fact, they
are called "illegal" because they are breaking the law.

In
truth, the battle over the Senate's guest worker-amnesty plan is really
a battle over attempts to open the border as called for in programs
such as North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Security
and Prosperity Partnership (SPP). Both plans call for open borders and
economic integration of North America. Open borders are required to
fully implement the plans.

The
Bush Administration and those promoting illegal immigration were frankly
stunned at the force and determination of U.S. citizens to reject the
Senates immigration plan. Proponents played a very heavy hand in attempting
to force the scheme on a resisting citizenry. Such powerful forces are
not used to losing. Today they continue to seek new ways to work around
the opposition and pass the legislation, as a whole or incrementally.

However,
the anti-illegal fervor refuses to abate and in fact, dramatic new developments
are taking place in local communities across the nation that may well
stop the unpopular Federal schemes.

Meanwhile,
in an attempt to weaken the resolve of opponents, they are called fringe
fanatics. A common tactic employed by immigration proponents is to accuse
opponents of racism. They charge that opponents want to deny a new breed
of immigrant the chance to become Americans as many of our immigrant
forefathers did. They paint a Norman Rockwell-type picture of honest,
hard working immigrants, planting gardens, working in fields, doing
the work "no Americans want to do."

So,
in town after town across the nation the battle rages. And that is really
the point. Illegal immigration is not just a border issue. It is a national
issue affecting every large city and almost every small town. It must
be understood that illegal immigration is not just a matter of some
unhappy peasants hoping to seek a better life. It is a $300 billion
a year industry, combining the interests of multinational corporations
with those of drug cartels and Latino street gangs. Caught in between
are American communities and the American way of life. Some cities,
especially those along the points of entry at the border have become
dangerous no-mans lands, where no property is safe, no American citizen
is able to leave their home unarmed and some politicians turn a blind
eye as they profit under the table. As a result American civilization
is beginning to break down. That is why so many Americans refuse to
back down on the issue, continuing to demand a crack down, no matter
what name calling they must endure.

THE
ECONOMIC COST OF ILLEGALS

Federal
law (the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act) mandates
that all hospitals with emergency-room services must treat anyone who
shows up - including illegal aliens. In most cities across the nation,
illegals now use the emergency rooms as free primary care. And the hospitals
have to keep taking them.

Health
Care

The
annual cost for uncompensated emergency care to Mexican Border States
(California, New Mexico, Arizona and Texas) is $200 million. California
taxpayers paid $79 million for illegal alien health care. Four major
Los Angeles hospitals were bankrupted and shut down in 2004. Texas paid
$74 million. Georgia ran a $63 million deficit for 64,000 unpaid doctor
visits in 2002. Cochise County, Arizona spent 30% of its annual budget
on uncompensated care to illegal aliens. University Medical Care in
Tucson, Arizona spent $10 million on uncompensated care to illegal aliens.
77 hospitals in the four Border States now face financial emergencies.
Legal citizens are forced to fly emergency patients to other cities
for treatment. Taxes are going up to compensate.

Meanwhile,
as a result of the Federal Emergency Medical Act, Mexican ambulance
drivers are transporting hospital patients unable to pay for medical
care in Mexico to facilities in the United States. The ambulances are
driving through unguarded potions of the border with "little resistance"
at the instruction of Mexican officials.

Education

Federal
laws and a Supreme Court decision mandate that schools cannot deny free
education to illegal aliens. Over 300,000 pregnant women enter the nation
illegally every year. Taxpayers pay for food, housing medical care and
school. The average annual cost per child for education is $7,161, totaling
$109 billion to educate illegal aliens annually. The average cost of
bilingual education is $1,200 per illegal student. U.S. schools annually
educate 1.1 million illegal children. Schools have become over crowded
and unruly. Teacher shortages (especially those who speak Spanish) are
a growing problem for local school districts.

One
teacher has reported what it is like in the classrooms in schools where
federal tax dollars pay for free medical, free baby sitters for student
mothers as young as thirteen, and free breakfasts (where "the waste
of food is monumental, with trays and trays of being dumped in the trash
uneaten"), new computers are "carved with graffiti by students." "I
have had to intervene several times for young and substitute teachers
whose classes consist of many illegal immigrant students here in the
country less than three months who raise so much hell with the female
teachers, calling them "Putas" (whores) and throwing things that the
teachers were in tears" she reports. Such is the atmosphere in today's
schools which are overrun by illegal aliens who speak no English and
there is no ability to control or discipline.

Moreover,
state run colleges and universities are being forced to allow illegal
aliens to receive in-state tuition discounts that are supposed to be
reserved for residents of that state. In California, a law, (Assembly
Bill 540) allows undocumented high school graduates who have been in
residence for three years to enroll in community colleges and the California
State University and University of California systems without paying
nonresident tuition. The same is true in many other states across the
country.

The
Jobs Americans Don't Want

In
2003, illegal aliens displaced American workers at a cost in excess
of $133 billion, while American college and high school students can't
find summer jobs in yard care, landscape, fast food or service jobs
- because illegal aliens work those jobs at a third of the wage - often
under the table.

Crime

Crimes
committed by alien criminals, such as rape, murder or drug distribution
costs U.S. taxpayers $1.6 billion in prison costs alone. The figure
doesn't include the cost of lost property, medical bills of the victims,
time lost from work to recover, higher insurance costs, etc. Today,
illegal aliens make up twenty nine percent of the U.S. prison population
- or 500,000 illegals.

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Latino
gangs like Mara Salvatrucha 13 (MS13) constitute most of the crime from
the ranks of the illegals. They originated in El Salvador and today
their U.S. leadership still comes from there. They steal cars and use
them to run drugs over the border. They terrorize local citizens with
violence. They are the chief source of drug sales for the cartels. And
they are racists.

MS13
is the largest and most violent of all gangs in the US today. They have
overtaken the Crips and the Bloods both in size and violence. MS13,
which began its operations in Los Angeles has now moved east and is
prominent on the East Coast.

In
Los Angeles, Mexican gangs declared "ethnic cleansing zones" in specific
parts of the city. They kill whites and blacks. In New Jersey, recently,
MS13 gang members killed three college students in execution style.

NO
MANS LAND AT THE BORDER

No
legal citizen of the United States of America, living under the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights should have to live as those who reside near
the U.S. / Mexican border. Here there are no property rights, no ability
to be safe in their homes, and no peace. One dare not go to the movies,
the grocery or visit a relative without carrying a weapon for protection.
Through out the community the streets are teaming with drug dealers,
loiterers and gangs bent on violence.

The
illegals flood across their property having just crossed the border.
As they pass over the ranches and private property they leave a trail
of trash, human waste and dead farm animals and pets. Found in the trash
that is dropped all along the trail are pieces of paper containing contact
phone numbers. Also found are Korans dropped by obvious Muslims who
have made their way across the border.

Sometimes
the illegals walk right in to the living rooms and steal what they want.
Many homes on the border are now little more than prisons for the residents,
surrounded by barbed wire, searchlights, with loaded guns at the ready.

The
Tucson, Arizona area is one of the prime crossing points for illegals.
The organization for transporting illegals is almost a precision military
operation. On the Mexican side of the border is a landing strip where
planes fly in on a regular basis with their cargo. Some of it human;
some drugs. It's all the same to those providing the transportation.

The
planes land and the cargo is loaded onto busses with the windows whited
out. Young girls prepare for the trip by taking birth control, for they
know what awaits them on the trip across the border from their "travel
assistants" - rape. It's just part of the price for crossing the border
into the promised land of America.

The
busses drive to a specific location on the border. Here the cargo is
unloaded and the process of walking across the border begins. Each of
the human cargo is given information on what to do once they reach the
other side, including a phone number of someone to call. The number
is not necessarily a local number. It may be a location in Virginia,
or Maine or Utah. Anywhere in the U.S. The person on the other end gives
instructions on how to gain transportation to their location where they
will be brought into the illegal community in that city.

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And
so the journey across the border begins. Somewhere in the middle, between
Mexico and the U.S. is a tree. From the branches of that tree hang women's
panties. It's called the panty tree. Why? Trophies from the raped women
of previous journeys. It's just the cost of doing business with the
"Coyotes," the murderous thugs who run the illegal immigrant trade.
They don't care who lives or dies. These are the ones who will leave
illegals locked in trucks without food or water or ventilation. They
charge enormous fees - up front. To them the cargo is all the same.
They carry the drugs with the humans. They make deals with terrorists
for the same trip. They rape, maim and kill. And go back for another
load. Business is booming. For part two click below.

In
truth, the battle over the Senate's guest worker-amnesty plan is really
a battle over attempts to open the border as called for in programs such
as North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Security and Prosperity
Partnership (SPP). Both plans call for open borders and economic integration
of North America.